“At last, media has registered public outrage in response to Filoche’s tweet portraying French President Macron wearing a Nazi armband with the swastika replaced by a dollar sign. Placed behind him are three Jewish personalities: communications mogul Patrick Drahi, banker Jacob Rothschild and political advisor Jacques Attali. In the background are the United States and Israeli flags,” noted the Centre.

Filoche expressed his regret – but in antisemitic language –, calling the source of the subsequent attack upon him a ‘conspiracy’ and a ‘cabal’, calumnies drawn from the notorious Russian Tsarist forgery, “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” often defined as “A Warrant for Genocide.”

Attali has announced he will sue Filoche for ethnic defamation.

Filoche, whose father spent four years in a Nazi German prison camp, should have known better. Though the Socialist Party General Secretary is taking steps to expel him, he continues to claim that he did not notice the racist imagery nor realize that it originated in the French extreme right.

“Turn extreme left on our planet and you will be sure to meet the extreme right… Counter-measures taken in France can set an example and highlight the embrace of antisemitism in sister Parties such as British Labour and similar behavior in Germany, Netherlands and Scandinavia… Our Centre joins French protest in support of President Macron as a victim of extremist incitement,” concluded Samuels.